That page is friendly to searching, with the whole text in one page. Thank you.I will look into it later, and when still I might not be able to find the place, I will ask you help again.(ARTICLE 21WHETHER THE SOUL, WHEN SEPARATED FROM THE BODY, CAN SUFFER PUNISHMENT BY CORPOREAL FIREseems to be the place.)

Adrianus, I read the chapter to the sec. 20, but so far what is disputed is whether the pain is a bad (or the worst) thing, and no detailed description of my concern is found. This chapter continues long. Can I expect that I will find what I want to read in the following sections ?

By the way, for the first time I'm reading a Latin text with speed and free skipping, (just like when I'm reading Japanese texts to find places I want to read,) using William Whitaker's Word, without caring about detailed questions on the grammar and word meaning.Thank you.By your prompting, my skill in reading Latin developed today.(As I said to you before, I have been long stucked in a strange mannerism, in which I have to laboriously consult the L&S for each and every word in reading any Latin text.)

Junya wrote:want to find a place in Thomas Aquinas' book...no detailed description of my concern is found. This chapter continues long. Can I expect that I will find what I want to read in the following sections ?

What are you concerned about? I just think this is well written on the subject of pain.Quid tibi curae est? Ad delorem pertinet et bene scriptus hic liber, ut opinor.

Yes. Self-observation, especially self-observation of pain and other bad and should-be-improved points, and the method of improvement deriving from the self-observation.Does the chapter 2 in Tusculanae disputationes go into that matter ?

---------------As to Thomas Aquinas' Quaestiones Disputatae De Anima, as I looked into the article 21, the view that the pain is peculiar to the body, and even in mental sufferings what is really suffering is the body, doesn't seem to be of Thomas, but of someone other.

But what I read before was not Quaestiones Disputatae De Anima. It was probably The Commentary to Aristotle's De Anima by Thomas Aquinas, or De Malo by him.I have to search into those books to find the passage.

Then, could you advise me how to search as easily as possible.(I have never been taught the method by a teacher.)Do I just search the books bit by bit, taking several days or weeks ?

---------Recently, I got a vision on what I should research and study from now on.It's about searching for the texts on self-observation.And for now, if there really was that view I mentioned above, I want to trace it historically.